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Israeli police shoot, kill 17-year-old Palestinian in Hebron OCT. 25, 2015 2:39 P.M. (UPDATED: OCT. 26, 2015 3:15 P.M.) Scene of the incident (MaanImages) BETHLEHEM (Ma'an) -- Israeli border police shot and killed a 17-year-old Palestinian girl near the Ibrahimi Mosque in Hebron in the southern occupied West Bank on Sunday, Palestinian and Israeli sources said. The girl was identified as Dania Irsheid, 17, from central Hebron. An Israeli police spokesperson said that the girl was shot dead after police officers allegedly saw "a knife in her hand." No Israelis were injured during the incident. A Palestinian woman who was in the area told Ma'an that she watched as "occupation soldiers covered a young Palestinian woman who was lying on the ground bleeding without giving her medical aid at all, before an ambulance arrived and took her." Another witness told Ma'an that he saw a schoolgirl with a schoolbag on her back trying to cross the Israeli checkpoint near the Ibrahimi mosque. "An Israeli soldier asked her to take the knife out of her bag, then he immediately fired gunshots into the air," the witness

8 Woman, 17 and Man, 54 Killed in Hebron

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Page 1: 8 Woman, 17 and Man, 54 Killed in Hebron

Israeli police shoot, kill 17-year-old Palestinian in HebronOCT. 25, 2015 2:39 P.M. (UPDATED: OCT. 26, 2015 3:15 P.M.)

Scene of the incident (MaanImages)BETHLEHEM (Ma'an) -- Israeli border police shot and killed a 17-year-old Palestinian girl near the Ibrahimi Mosque in Hebron in the southern occupied West Bank on Sunday, Palestinian and Israeli sources said.The girl was identified as Dania Irsheid, 17, from central Hebron.An Israeli police spokesperson said that the girl was shot dead after police officers allegedly saw "a knife in her hand." No Israelis were injured during the incident.A Palestinian woman who was in the area told Ma'an that she watched as "occupation soldiers covered a young Palestinian woman who was lying on the ground bleeding without giving her medical aid at all, before an ambulance arrived and took her."Another witness told Ma'an that he saw a schoolgirl with a schoolbag on her back trying to cross the Israeli checkpoint near the Ibrahimi mosque."An Israeli soldier asked her to take the knife out of her bag, then he immediately fired gunshots into the air," the witness said. "Seconds later the schoolgirl was lying on the ground bleeding."The woman's death brings the total number of Palestinians killed by Israeli forces to at least 57 since the beginning of the month.While 29 of those killed were shot after allegedly carrying out attacks on Israelis, a number of alleged attacks have been disputed by Palestinian

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witnesses and investigations by rights groups who say the suspects posed no threat at the time of their death.Video footage in a number of cases has raised criticism of what Israeli rights group B'Tselem terms "extrajudicial executions," where a "shoot-to-kill" policy advocated by Israeli officials has led to high numbers of unnecessary deaths.Hebron has seen a particularly high death toll in recent weeks with nine Palestinians shot dead since late September -- in every case after an alleged stabbing attempt -- and one Palestinian activist dying from excessive tear gas inhalation.At least nine Israelis have been killed by Palestinians since Oct. 1, leading Israeli authorities to deploy large numbers of Israeli military personnel and police forces across the occupied Palestinian territory.

(MaanImages)

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(MaanImages)

After years of peaceful protest, Hebron activist dies in tear gasOCT. 22, 2015 4:45 P.M. (UPDATED: OCT. 25, 2015 4:40 P.M.)

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Hashem al-Azzeh died from excessive tear gas inhalation when he was stopped at a checkpoint in Hebron's Old City. (Karam Saleem)By: Killian ReddenBETHLEHEM (Ma’an) -- Dr. Hashem al-Azzeh, who died on Wednesday after suffering excessive tear gas inhalation in Hebron’s Old City, was the latest victim of the Israeli settlement policies he spent most of his life struggling against.The 54-year-old activist and medical doctor was one of a few Palestinians who chose to remain with his family in Tel Rumeida, a neighborhood in central Hebron that over the course of decades has seen most of its Palestinian residents pushed out by aggressive Israeli settlers.On Wednesday, after experiencing chest pains in his home, he found himself trapped.His family called an ambulance, but it was unable to reach him due to a series of Israeli army checkpoints along the nearby Shuhada Street, his niece Sundus al-Azzeh told Ma’an.Hashem began to walk toward the checkpoint at Bab al-Zawiya, where fierce clashes were underway as Palestinians protested the death of two Palestinian teenagers shot dead the night before.Once there, however, Sundus said that Israeli soldiers stopped him from moving on, and he soon found himself engulfed by tear gas. Unable to breath, he collapsed.He was rushed to Hebron’s governmental hospital, but doctors were unable to save him.

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A doctor told Ma’an that Hashem had a history of cardiovascular disease, but it was tear gas inhalation that killed him.Sundus said she was at his side when he passed away -- it was the first time she had seen someone die.‘Daily attacks’Palestinians’ freedom of movement in Tel Rumeida was severely restricted in 1994, after an American-born Israeli settler, Baruch Goldstein, massacred 29 Palestinians in the Old City’s Ibrahimi Mosque.While most Palestinians chose to leave the neighborhood, Hashem chose to remain, at one point even refusing an Israeli offer to buy his home.“He wanted to face the settlers,” said Jawad Abu Aisheh, who works in the nearby Youth Against Settlements activist group. It was Hashem’s belief that if every Palestinian were to leave, nothing would stop the settlers from taking all their land.He began to guide foreigners through the divided city, showing them Hebron’s illegal settlements, the military checkpoints, and the streets entirely closed to Palestinians.Abu Aisheh said that Hashem viewed these tours as “non-violent means to defend himself.”However, life in the neighborhood was a constant struggle.“You could say that the attacks were daily,” said Abu Aisheh, adding that when the settlers did not physically assault Hashem and his family, they would swear at them, demanding that they leave for Jordan.Sometimes, the soldiers refused him entry through the Shuhada Street checkpoint, and he would have to take a dangerous back-route through olive trees and fences, where he risked arrest by Israeli forces.In footage filmed before his death, Hashem said that his wife had suffered two miscarriages after settler attacks, while a stone was used to destroy the teeth of his nine-year-old nephew.“Later on, they came and attacked us inside our houses,” Hashem said, describing how they destroyed the furniture, and smashed his head and teeth with the butts of their guns.

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Clashes have broken out in Hebron nearly every day this month. (AFP/Hazem Bader/File)‘Abuse of powers’The settlers that have taken over Hebron’s Old City are widely known to be among the most aggressive in the occupied West Bank.They began arriving in the late 1970s, using armed force to evict Palestinians from their homes. There are now some 500 of them living among nearly 200,000 Palestinians and protected by the Israeli army.Israeli rights group B’Tselem has reported that Israel’s “legal and physical segregation between the Israeli settlers and the Palestinian majority” has led to more than 1,000 Palestinian homes being vacated in Hebron’s center, and the closure of up to 1,829 Palestinian businesses.While settlers “routinely” use violence again Hebron’s Palestinian residents, B'Tselem reported that “the increased presence of soldiers and police … brings with it violence, excessive and unjustified use of force, and abuse of the powers granted by law.”Hashem's niece, Sundus, said that her uncle had always remained hopeful, despite the extreme changes he witnessed throughout his life.She said that while their family was “less strong now,” Hashem's death would ultimately leave them stronger.She could not be sure whether Hashem’s wife and four children, the eldest 17 years old, the youngest only five, would choose to remain in Tel Rumeida following his death. While Hashem’s wife has relatives in Jordan, Sundus said that her family would take care of them if they stayed.

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“We have to be here -- it’s our home, it’s our land,” she said. “We have to be patient. We have to be strong.”Abu Aisheh agreed: “Anyone who lives in that area must be very patient.”